Prambanan is the largest Hindu temple compound in Indonesia and one of the largest in Southeast Asia. Built in the 9th century during the Mataram Kingdom, the complex centres on three towering shrines dedicated to the Trimurti — Shiva the Destroyer, Vishnu the Preserver, and Brahma the Creator. The tallest tower, the Shiva temple, reaches 47 metres and is decorated with reliefs depicting the entire Ramayana epic — one of the most complete stone narratives in the ancient world.
UNESCO inscribed Prambanan as a World Heritage Site in 1991, recognising it as a masterpiece of Hindu art and architecture. The compound sits 17 kilometres northeast of Yogyakarta on the ancient boundary between two rival kingdoms — one Hindu, one Buddhist. Its neighbour, the Buddhist monument of Borobudur, lies 40 kilometres to the northwest. Together they represent twelve centuries of Javanese religious history, and many international visitors to Yogyakarta make time for both independently.
Prambanan welcomes over two million visitors each year. The temple grounds are open daily from 06:30 to 17:00, with last entry at 16:30. Late afternoon — when the warm light strikes the carved stone and the crowds thin — is the favourite hour for photographers and the most atmospheric time to explore the 240 temples that make up the wider complex.